iFixit iPhone 8 Teardown Finds Qualcomm Gigabit Modem

The most notable part in iFixit's teardown is the Qualcomm X16 modem with its WTR5975 RF transciever. This is the same modem used in leading Android smartphones, including the Samsung Galaxy S8, Not 8, Moto Z2 Force, ve Essential PH-1. We looked atwhere those phones standin terms of modem features last week.

The X16 is capable of "gigabit" speeds, which aren't really gigabit anywhere outside test labs, but they're the fastest speeds that current networks are capable of. As we saw in ourFastest Mobile Networks tests, the Samsung Galaxy S8's "gigabit" system was noticeably faster than other phones even on pre-"gigabit" networks.

But alas, iPhone 8 is not a gigabit phone after all. To hit gigabit speeds, you need three components: the modem, antennas for 4x4 MIMO, and software support for 256/64QAM encoding. We've learned that the iPhone 8 doesn't have the four antennas needed for 4x4 MIMO, which would restrict it to either 600Mbps or 800Mbps, depending on the way the rest of the phone is configured.

The lack of 4x4 isn't just about speed. 4x4 MIMO tends to improve coverage in edge and weak signal areas, which may contribute to why the iPhone 8 still takes longer to recover from dead zones than the Galaxy S8, in our testing.

You'll still get better performance on the iPhone 8 versus the iPhone 7, which had Qualcomm's Snapdragon X12, especially in Canada. The X16 supports four-carrier aggregation, which Bell and Telus in Canada are using to achieve real-world speeds pushing 500Mbps, according to ourFastest Mobile Networks Canadatests. The iPhone 7's X12 only had three-carrier aggregation.

This Happened on Purpose

Apple could have put 4x4 MIMO antennas in its phone; it probably didn't because of Intel.

There are three different SKUs of each iPhone 8 model: one with CDMA, one without, and one for Japan. We're pretty sure the CDMA and Japan SKUs use the X16. But we think the third model uses an Intel modem, the XMM7480, which doesn't support 4x4 MIMO. Apple doesn't want the different models of its phone to perform very differently.

There's no teardown of an Intel version of the iPhone 8 yet, but we think it'll come in time. We'll keep peering into the iPhone 8's modem capabilities over the next week and keep you updated.